... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 29) June 1995 Last| Contents| Next Issue 29 Books Operation Mind Control W. H. Bowart, Self-published, Tucson, Arizona, 1994. Operation Mind Control was originally published in 1978 by Dell Paperbacks. It came out around the same time as John Marks' The Search for the Manchurian Candidate, a rather anodyne book which, after dealing with CIA and military LSD experiments which caused at least one unwitting victim to jump out a window, decided that 'mind control' of the Manchurian Candidate variety did not exist. Bowart's book took the opposite view. Drawing from mostly anecdotal evidence- such as the Candy Jones story and the ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 23) June 1992 Last| Contents| Next Issue 23 Mind Control and the American Government Martin Cannon The spectre of technofascism haunts the democratic nations. All the powers of the espionage empire and the scientific establishment have entered into an unholy alliance to evoke this spectre: psychiatrist and spy, Dulles and Delgado, microwave specialists and clandestine operators. Substantial evidence exists linking members of the American intelligence community-- including the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Office of Naval Intelligence-- with the esoteric technology of mind control. For decades, 'spychiatrists' working behind the scenes-- on college campuses, in CIA-sponsored ...

... Contents Lobster 59 The Dr Strangeloves of the Mind Anthony Frewin A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA's Secret Cold War Experiments H. P. Albarelli, Jr. Walterville, Oregon: TrineDay, 2009. xxvi+ 826 pp. Illustrations, notes, index. At 2.25am on 28 November 1953 Dr Frank R Olson, a U.S. government bacteriologist, fell or jumped to his death from a tenth floor room of the Hotel Statler in New York City. He had travelled up to New York with a colleague, Dr Robert Lashbrook, a Defense Department chemist, to see a doctor as he had been ill for several months with ulcer problems, ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 40) Winter 2000/1 Last| Contents| Next Issue 40 The Jew of Linz: Wittgenstein, Hitler and their Secret Battle for the Mind Kimberley Cornish London: Arrow, 1999, £7.99 Philip Conford On p. 86 of this enthralling book Kimberley Cornish invites readers to complete the following sentence: 'Wittgenstein was offered the Chair in Philosophy at Lenin's university [Kazan] in 1935 because...' What possible reason can there be except that he was serving the Soviet regime? Cornish contends that Wittgenstein recruited the Trinity College spies and, while recognising that the evidence he adduces does not amount to conclusive proof, he makes an ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 25) June 1993 Last| Contents| Next Issue 25 Mind control update Writing about something you don't really understand, it's easy to make bad early decisions. It's like being self-taught on an instrument and acquiring bad habits. In this case I began by naming this subject 'ELF', extremely low frequency, which was about all I picked up from my initial reading of the torrent of documents which descended on me from Harlan Girard. Me being a scientific moron, you understand. Three years later, no less ignorant of basic science, it is now clear that there are at least four discrete issues involved here. Murderous furniture? The ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 55) Summer 2008 Last| Contents| Next Issue 55 Mind control <http://artificialtelepathy.blogspot.com/> is a good introduction to the subject of mind control technologies and psychotronics as seen by some of the victims of what they call the 'electronic concentration camp'. On the first couple of screens there is a list of the symptoms reported by the victims or if you are sceptical, the 'victims' of this technology. Some of these effects are described as established fact in a recently declassified US military study of this subject, 'Bioeffects of Selected Non-Lethal Weapons.(1) This is a survey of existing research in these fields and ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 19) May 1990 Last| Contents| Next Issue 19 ELF: from Mind Control to Mind Wars Over the past six months I have been given a large (and still growing) pile of documents about extremely low frequency electromagnetic radiation, or ELF for short. This is not really Lobster territory, nor am I scientifically equipped to synthesise this material. However, this subject seems to me to be of major importance and I offer this sketch in the hope that some readers will be sufficiently interested to pursue it. I suspect this is the biggest development in military technology since the splitting of the atom. The idea that electromagnetic radiation is ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 34) Winter 1998 Last| Contents| Next Issue 34 The military use of electromagnetic, microwave and mind control technology Armen Victorian 'Isn't it true that when those poor devils stop suffering it is through a loss of what you call psyche? '( 1) The psychotronics era The former Soviet Union had a long history of programmes in energetics and psycho-energetics technology, known to the West as psychotronics. Until recently, the bulk of the initial work on the science underpinning this technology had been done in the West and smuggled to the Soviet Union. For decades the scientific community of the West ignored the work of people like Moray Abrams, Hieronymous ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 28) December 1994 Last| Contents| Next Issue 28 Mind control Is your journey really necessary? The Guardian 'Weekend' section of August 13, 1994, carried a piece called 'The Seeds of Madness', about Mark Purdey, the dairy farmer who has opposed the British agro-chemical industry, believing that the so-called 'mad cow disease', BSE, was the result of organo-phosphate poisoning. Life became complicated for him and the article describes a catalogue of harassment by persons unknown. Two of the people who had taken his side of the argument died. One was a solicitor, Peter Ward, who helped Purdy in a case against the Ministry ...

... (c) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 24) December 1992 Last| Contents| Next Issue 24 Mind control and microwave update The story 'The lethal bomb that does not kill' (Daily Telegraph 27 September 1992) proves that there is military interest in this country in microwaves. The story itself is a plant from the Ministry of Defence. Its purpose is unknown. In the United States the microwave/mind control subject has been taken up by the Association of National Security Alumni. In a briefing they issued on August 19, 1992, after summarising the known DoD and CIA interest in this field, they commented on 'The increasing number of persons contacting us for assistance in ending ...